Appreciating Fathers

Though this is an annual day set aside for this, as a culture we really do need to celebrate Fathers. Here’s an interesting WSJ column that reflects on manhood.

Many academics would consider my lack of manliness a good thing. They regard boys as thugs-in-training, caught up in a patriarchal society that demeans women. In the 1990s the American Association of University Women (among others) positioned boys as the enemies of female progress (something Christina Hoff Sommers exposed in her book, “The War Against Boys”). But the latest trend is to depict boys as themselves victims of a testosterone-infected culture. In their book “Raising Cain,” for example, the child psychologists Don Kindlon and Michael Thompson warn parents against a “culture of cruelty” among boys. Forget math, science and throwing a ball, they suggest–what your boy most needs to learn is emotional literacy.

That’s what’s wrong with society’s regard for manliness.

But I can’t shake the sense that boys are supposed to become manly. Rather than neutering their aggression, confidence and desire for danger, we should channel these instincts into honor, gentlemanliness and courage. Instead of inculcating timidity in our sons, it seems wiser to train them to face down bullies, which by necessity means teaching them how to throw a good uppercut. In his book “Manliness,” Harvey Mansfield writes that a person manifesting this quality “not only knows what justice requires, but he acts on his knowledge, making and executing the decision that the rest of us trembled even to define.” You can’t build a civilization and defend it against barbarians, fascists and playground bullies, in other words, with a nation of Phil Donahues.

Maybe the problem isn’t that boys are aggressive, but that we’ve neglected their moral education. As Teddy Roosevelt wrote to one of his sons: “I would rather have a boy of mine stand high in his studies than high in athletics, but I would a great deal rather have him show true manliness of character than show either intellectual or physical prowess.” Manliness, then, is not the ability to survive in the wilderness, or wield a rifle. But having such skills increases the odds that one’s manly actions–which Roosevelt and others believed flow from a moral quality–will be successful.

The good father, then, needs to nurture his son’s moral and spiritual core, and equip him with the skills he’ll need to act on the moral impulse that we call courage.

We need to encourage fathers to be a witness to morality and find strength in courage.

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